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Microsoft is finally handing Windows 11 users something they've wanted for years: the ability to delay updates on their own terms, indefinitely. The company announced this week that users can now pause Windows updates and keep resetting that pause as many times as they want — in 35-day windows, back to back, with no hard limit.
Previously, 35 days was the ceiling, full stop. Once it expired, the update ran whether you liked it or not.The changes are currently live for users enrolled in the Windows Insider Dev and Experimental channels, with a broader rollout expected soon.
Reading 7,600+ feedback submissions will do that to you
Microsoft's Aria Hanson, who authored the official blog post, mentioned personally reading over 7,621 user feedback submissions in recent months. Two complaints kept surfacing: updates interrupting people at the worst possible time, and not having enough say in when they happen.The new pause feature addresses both. Users can now pick a specific calendar date to pause until—handy for planning around a conference, exam week, or a particularly hectic stretch of deadlines.
Shutting down your PC won't trigger an update anymore
The other big fix is arguably just as satisfying. Windows will no longer hijack your shutdown. The Power menu will now always show plain "Restart" and "Shut down" options alongside "Update and restart" and "Update and shut down"—so you can actually choose.
Microsoft is also bundling driver, .NET, and firmware updates together with the monthly quality update, cutting down on the number of restarts users deal with each month.New device setup gets a small upgrade too. Out-of-the-box, users can now skip updates entirely and head straight to the desktop—something that wasn't officially possible before.Microsoft is clear that it still recommends taking updates promptly for security reasons. But at least now, "promptly" can mean something closer to your schedule.




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